Cultural variations

    Cards (23)

    • What is the main purpose of studying attachment behaviors around the world?
      To determine if attachment is innate and biological or a result of nurture and culture
    • What is the most commonly used tool for measuring attachment behaviors?
      The Strange Situation
    • Why might the Strange Situation not provide an accurate idea of attachment behaviors worldwide?
      It may not account for cultural differences in attachment behaviors
    • Who conducted a meta-analysis on cultural variations in attachment styles?
      Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg
    • How many studies were included in the meta-analysis by Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg?
      32 studies
    • How many children were involved in the studies analyzed by Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg?
      1,990 children
    • What was the most common attachment style found in all nations studied?
      Secure attachment
    • What was the dominant style of insecure attachment found in Western cultures?
      Avoidant attachment
    • What was the dominant style of insecure attachment found in non-Western cultures?
      Resistant attachment
    • What does the finding that variation within cultures is 1.5 times greater than between cultures suggest?
      There are more differences in attachment styles within a single country than between different countries
    • What does the concept of universality in attachment suggest?
      Similar attachment behaviors would be found around the world
    • What percentage of securely attached children was found in West Germany?
      57%
    • What percentage of resistant attachment was found in Japan?
      27%
    • What do the findings about secure attachment suggest about infant-caregiver interactions?
      There may be universal characteristics in these interactions
    • What does the term "amae" refer to in Japanese culture?
      Emotional dependence or indulgent dependence
    • How do American and Japanese mothers differ in their interpretation of a child calling for them during naptime?
      American mothers see it as negative behavior, while Japanese mothers view it as positive
    • What is a strength of cross-cultural research into attachment?
      It uses the Strange Situation, which has high inter-rater reliability
    • What was the inter-rater reliability percentage found by Bick (2012) for the Strange Situation?
      94%
    • Why is the Strange Situation considered ethnocentric?
      It was designed based on American ideals of attachment behavior
    • What does the lack of population validity in Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg’s meta-analysis imply?
      It may not accurately represent attachment behaviors across all cultures
    • What did Mesman et al. (2020) find about child-rearing practices in the Gusii of rural Kenya?
      They expressed sensitive responding in more physical ways than verbal ways
    • What are the key findings of Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg's meta-analysis on attachment styles?
      • Secure attachment is the most common style globally.
      • Western cultures show avoidant attachment as dominant insecure style.
      • Non-Western cultures show resistant attachment as dominant insecure style.
      • Variation within cultures is greater than between cultures.
    • What are the strengths and weaknesses of using the Strange Situation in cross-cultural research?
      Strengths:
      • High inter-rater reliability (94%).
      • Standardized and replicable research tool.

      Weaknesses:
      • Ethnocentric design based on American ideals.
      • Lack of population validity with limited non-Western studies.